My View - SunSport's tennis correspondent Dan King

I still think Andy Murray will walk on to Centre Court on Monday afternoon to fulfil the traditional obligation of the reigning men’s champion at Wimbledon.
The feeling is that however bad the hip injury, playing there means so much to him that it would take something extraordinary to stop the world No 1 at least trying to defend his title.
But this latest setback in a difficult year makes it very hard to see Murray lasting all the way to the end of the fortnight and lifting the trophy again.
He will arrive at the All England Club with just one grass-court match under his belt – the shock first-round defeat by world No 90 Jordan Thompson at Queen”s, where he was also the defending champion.
And with only 30 competitive singles contests this year – compared to 39 before Wimbledon last year – Murray will be undercooked for his biggest event of the year.
That will make him vulnerable to an early exit, if he is fit to play. He has defied logic many times before, but to win a third SW19 title from this position, with Roger Federer and so many other rivals in better nick, would be among the greatest achievements of even his remarkable career.

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